Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Thin Flats, 2009 Philadelphia Sustainability Awards Winner


The Thin Flats project was recently chosen as one of the 5 winners for The Philadelphia Sustainability Awards out of nearly 70 nominees.  The other winners include Bob Pierson for Farm to City, The Energy Coordinating Agency, The Philadelphia Eagles Go Green Initiative and the Schuylkill Banks Greenway Project.  

On Sunday the Inquirer wrote about the award winners saying this about Thin Flats 

"As the first LEED duplexes in the country, and most importantly being sold at a market rate price, Thin Flats proves that sustainable building does not have to be more expensive. This is a fundamental mission of Onion Flats.

Thin Flats is a unique experiment for Philadelphia, the region and the country. Scheduled to be the first LEED Platinum duplexes in the country, this project demonstrates that the highest level of sustainable building and living is not only possible, but accessible in a dense urban setting. It also shows how this is achieved by working with existing typologies of dwelling in the city: the Row house/duplex. As such, Thin Flats will be model of sustainable building for the country. This project will educate the general public, private developers and politicians through concrete and measurable ways that sustainable building must be common place, not a series of novelty exercises for those who can afford it. They believe that through Thin Flats it will become that much more apparent to wider audience that the question is not what is the cost of “living sustainably” but rather what is cost of living otherwise.

GREENandSAVE.com is a free resource for anyone that wants to save energy, money, and the environment. The articles, product reviews, online tools, and return on investment calculations are researched from a diverse range of public and private sector sources. Overall, the company is passionate about saving money as well as creating healthy homes, offices, and lifestyles.

Monday, March 9, 2009

I am not a paper cup











I bought this ceramic mug over the weekend at the Franklin Institute. Looks just like a paper cup with a plastic top!

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Renovation Nation!

10-year tax abatement going green?

From Philly.com


The 10-year tax abatement is getting a hard look in City Hall. Here's one of the more intruiging proposals we've heard for a potential change: tie the abatements to the environmental friendliness of the new buildings. The abatements would be given only to those properties that receive LEED certification, and the abatements would get bigger depending on what level of certification the project receives. A press release on the proposal follows.

----------------------------

TAX ABATEMENT GOING GREEN
Bill changes property tax abatement to require LEED certification


Philadelphia, PA (March 5, 2009) — On Thursday, March 5th, Council members Blondell Reynolds Brown and Curtis Jones Jr. will co-sponsor and introduce a bill that will “green” the current ten year tax abatement on all new and rehabilitated residential and rehabilitated commercial properties. Applicants under the new system will receive property tax abatements proportional to achieving one of the four LEED Green Building certification levels: Certified, Silver, Gold, or Platinum.

The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating system is the nation’s leading Green Building standard. Created and administered by the United States Green Building Council, LEED measures performance through standards that evolve through industry input and expertise. Certification is achieved by demonstrating certain required actions as well as a flexible point system that allows each building to coordinate green building techniques and materials appropriate for each project’s unique budget and design. At last count, 345 jurisdictions are using the LEED rating system as part of their tax abatements, public building requirements or zoning requirements, according to the United States Green Building Council database.